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Kiri Industries Ltd Q1FY26 – The ₹30,000-Crore Dream Built on Colour, Court Cases, and Copper


1. At a Glance

Kiri Industries Ltd (NSE: KIRIINDUS, BSE: 532967) is the ultimate Bollywood script of Indian manufacturing — colour, chaos, courtroom drama, and copper. The ₹3,605 crore company trades at ₹601/share, with a P/E of 19.7, ROCE of 10.5%, and a ROE of 8.6%. The company manufactures dyes, dye intermediates, and basic chemicals — and now plans to diversify into copper smelting and fertilizers, because why not.

FY25 sales stood at ₹759 crore, down 58% from FY22, thanks to weak global textile demand. But PAT? A juicy ₹183 crore, largely inflated by ₹136 crore “other income” (read: DyStar accounting gains). Debt has ballooned to ₹1,124 crore, promoter pledging is at 62.8%, and the company has ₹1,494 crore in contingent liabilities.

So yes — the balance sheet looks like Holi after a rainstorm. Beautiful from afar, messy up close.

Question: Can a dye-maker realistically build a ₹30,000 crore copper empire before solving its own colour crisis?


2. Introduction

Kiri Industries began in 1998 as a humble dye-maker in Ahmedabad. Back then, it was just one of hundreds of chemical units colouring India’s textiles. But over two decades, Kiri developed a peculiar personality — part manufacturer, part global litigant, part wannabe industrial conglomerate.

The company has weathered China dumping, global dye crashes, and even a Hollywood-level shareholder war. Its crown jewel is its 37.57% stake in DyStar Group, the world’s dye emperor with 21% global market share — and the subject of a decade-long legal soap opera with Chinese partner Longsheng Group.

In short: Kiri is a small-cap chemical player that accidentally owns a seat in the global dye mafia, is fighting China in Singapore, and wants to build copper plants in Gujarat.

Only in India could a dye manufacturer say, “Let’s do mining next.”


3. Business Model – WTF Do They Even Do?

Three main buckets — each with a different shade of volatility:

1️ Dye Intermediates (52% of revenue in H1 FY25):
Think H-Acid, Vinyl Sulphone, Aniline — the ingredients that make the world colourful (and regulators nervous). These are used by other companies to make reactive dyes.

2️ Dyes (43%):
Reactive, Direct, Acid, Disperse — Kiri supplies these to textile, leather, and garment producers across 50+ countries. But since 2022, global textile demand has been a wet towel on the industry.

3️ Basic Chemicals (5%):
Sulphuric Acid, Oleum, and Thionyl Chloride — the unglamorous but profitable workhorses that serve fertilizers, pharma, and auto batteries.

Export Mix: 44%
Domestic Mix: 56%
Presence: 50+ countries, across every continent except Antarctica — probably because penguins don’t wear dyed clothes.

Manufacturing happens at five plants in Gujarat (Ahmedabad & Vadodara), churning out everything from 36,000 TPA reactive dyes to 1,82,500 TPA basic chemicals.

Question: When 52% of your business depends on China’s textile demand, isn’t diversification into copper just wishful metallurgy?


4. Financials Overview

Source table
MetricLatest Qtr (Jun’25)YoY Qtr (Jun’24)Prev Qtr (Mar’25)YoY %QoQ %
Revenue₹202 Cr₹183 Cr₹205 Cr+10.2%-1.5%
EBITDA-₹16 Cr₹0 Cr-₹5 CrNA-220%
PAT₹10.1 Cr₹92 Cr-₹85 Cr-89%NA
EPS (₹)1.8217.8-15.2-90%NA

Commentary: The income statement looks like a rainbow — red, blue, and a few green patches from DyStar. Operational losses continue, while profits depend on non-operating items.


5. Valuation Discussion – Fair Value Range Only

a) P/E Method:
EPS (TTM) = ₹33.9, P/E = 19.7x → Implied Price = ₹667.
Industry Avg P/E = 20.5x → Fair Range = ₹650–₹700.

b) EV/EBITDA Method:
EV = ₹4,714 Cr, EBITDA (TTM) = ₹65 Cr → EV/EBITDA = 72x.
Peers (Sudarshan, Heubach) = 17–25x → Fair EV Range = ₹1,100–₹1,600 Cr.
Implied Price =

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